Golf is full of small questions that shape decisions on the course and in practice. How far should a 7 iron or pitching wedge really go? What causes a slice, a top, or a weak driver flight? How do concepts like bounce and smash factor actually affect performance?
For golfers in the UK, these questions usually sit in the gap between quick online definitions and useful, real-world advice. The terms are familiar, but the practical meaning is often less clear when you are trying to choose clubs, practise with purpose or make better decisions under pressure.
The Golf FAQs series brings those topics together in one place. The guides in this series cover distances, ball flight, strike quality, wedge setup and launch monitor concepts in a way that is clear, practical and easy to apply.
At Outtabounds, those conversations connect naturally with indoor practice, launch monitor feedback, golf simulator use and wider equipment decisions. This series is designed to help golfers move from vague questions to better answers.
How Far Does a 7 Iron Go?
A practical guide to average 7 iron carry distances, what changes them, and how to work out your own number with more confidence.
How to Fix a Slice in Golf
Understand why a slice starts and curves, then use simple setup checks and drills to bring the clubface and path under control.
How to Hit a Draw in Golf
A simple guide to producing a controlled draw by changing alignment, club path and face control without forcing the swing.
What Is Bounce on a Golf Wedge?
Bounce changes how the sole moves through turf and sand. This guide explains what it is, why it matters and how to choose it.
How to Stop Slicing Driver
Driver slices usually come from a face that stays open for the path. Learn how setup, tee height and drills can help straighten it out.
How Far Does a Pitching Wedge Go?
See typical pitching wedge carry distances, why loft and strike matter so much, and how to build a reliable scoring-club yardage.
How to Shallow the Golf Club
A clearer look at what shallowing means, what it is meant to improve, and how to practise it without overdoing the move.
What Is Smash Factor in Golf?
Smash factor shows how efficiently speed becomes ball speed. Learn what the numbers mean and what usually causes them to rise or fall.
How to Stop Topping the Golf Ball
Top shots usually come from poor low-point control rather than trying too hard. Learn the common causes and how to fix them.
If you are researching golf technique, practice data and everyday equipment decisions, these related Outtabounds pages may also be useful:
These pages help connect common golf questions with indoor practice, launch monitor feedback and the wider setup choices many golfers now make before spending money on equipment or building a home practice space.
Why These Golf FAQs Connect Naturally to Indoor Golf
Many of the topics in this series become easier to understand when golfers can measure shots in a controlled setting. Distances, strike quality, start line and ball-speed efficiency are all easier to judge when the feedback is clear.
That is why the Outtabounds pages on indoor golf simulators, launch monitors and garden-room setups fit so well alongside these guides. They help golfers connect technique questions with practical ways to practise and measure progress.
Whether you are building a better home setup, booking indoor sessions or simply researching equipment with more confidence, the goal is the same: better information, better feedback and better decisions.
To explore more equipment, practice technology and golf content, visit Outtabounds.